intel products always looks good on paper remember ivy-bridge.Future is FUSION-
AMD FirePro™ S10000(28nm 2D) delivers up to 5.91 TFLOPS of peak single precision and 1.48 TFLOPs of peak double precision floating point performance, compared to Nvidia Tesla K10 that is capable of up to 4.58 TFLOPS of peak single precision and 190 GFLOPs double precision peak floating point performance and even better than latest k20x(28nm 2D) and xeon-phi(22nm 3D) in double precision performance the best thing with s10000 is unified design.
AMD can do even better than xeon-phi with ARMv8 modified cores so lower TDP, lesser die size(one of the the most important to get denser server)
i m sure intel will use 3D memory stacking to achieve that performance in lower TDP, at that time AMD will also have access to 14nm-XM and for 3D memory AMD had that running successfully since 2011 in labs.

actually this all is waste coz of AMD hetrogenous APU/SoC. Scientists said with help of HSA APU/SoC it's possible to make petascale supercomputer in 1/3rd of power consumption which is beyond reach of xeon-phi and tesla or Fire-pro .AND FOR ALL INFORMATION IN 2013 AMD WILL LAUNCH A SOC OF 25GFLOPS/WATT WHICH IS EVEN HIGHER THAN 2015 XEON-PHI AND NVIDIA TESLA BUT WE CAN'T BUY THAT AMD SILICON IT'S ONLY FOR SOME PARTNERS.

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3.

Chart clearly shows the Intel 3+ TFlops number somewhere AFTER 2015. See the headline FUTURE that comes after the headline 2015.

What performance Knights Landing has in 2015 is not specified at all.

In 2014 Knights Corner will have to compete with Nvidia's Maxwell and will lose badly since it currently loses to Kepler in performance per watt and Maxwell will double performance per watt over Kepler.

In 2016+ (same time frame as Knights Landing) Nvidia will have Volta with it's performance of 24GFLOPS/W which is 50% higher than what Intel is quoting.

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LMAO, so Knights Corner (available at stores today) won't actually support its performance rating of 1 DP TFLOPS until 2014? The 22nm process tech, the GDDR5 memory interface and the PCIe3 form factor and bus are available today, but the product won't actually come with - so to speak - teraflops until next year? Features and performance figures are given in two different colums for space reasons, not because they arrive in different time frames. Notice how Knights Corner and Knights Landing occupy two years in the diagram because the same release stretches two years whereas for the CPUs a new either tick or tock is released each year.